|
Telephone Number Mnemonics
American visitors to Fun-with-words.com will be familiar with an ingenious method
of making telephone numbers more memorable.
In the USA many companies advertise
their telephone numbers with words. For example "Call 1800-CAT-HELP" might be the
advertising slogan for a feline rescue centre. This is much easier to remember than
"Call 1800-228-4357". To aid this system, the buttons on telephones are marked
with letters too, as shown on the right. This method has been used in Britain too,
although it is now far less popular. Nevertheless many British telephones are marked
with letters too.
A more usual technique used by British companies for making telephone numbers
memorable is to have a numerically very simple number such as 0800 100 200 or 0845
45 45 45.
Do you know anyone else who would enjoy this? Email this page to a friend.
Also: Sign up for our free web site updates here.
Software
- 010 Memorizer A powerful program for using the Major System. Contains
many features.
- MajorTeach is free (and Free) portable software to help you learn the
Major System
- 2Know is free Windows software for converting numbers to words (English,
German, French).
- Mnemisis Another free mnemonic program - runs on Linux, Mac OS X, and
Windows
Other
- Memory Improvement and Learning Information
- Memory Master
- Expand your Peg list by adding colors and smells, textures.
- Homepage of World Memory Championships
- Searchable linkword database of 13,000 numbers and all of their phonetic
mnemonic linkwords
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mnemonic_major_system"
See also the next mnemonic keywords
- Synaptic plasticity
- Autistic savant
- Autism
- Asperger syndrome
- Hyperthymesia - a condition where the affected individual has a superior
autobiographical memory
- Mnemonic
- Absolute pitch, also known as perfect pitch - the ability to differentiate
pitches, recall tones in the exact note without aid, and name a certain note
played in an instant
Calling Glenn Miller...
There are letters on my telephone dial.
This fact does not surprise you. "Of course there are letters on your telephone
dial," you say. "How else could you dial 1-800-CORRECT? How else could you dial
1-900-HOT-SEX? How else could you say `My phone number spells out PIGEONZ`?" (Ever
notice how in movies they use "555-" numbers to avoid accidentally giving someone`s
real phone number? Don`tcha hate that?)
But the letters on the telephone dial weren`t put there so people could spell
out cute words with their phone numbers. The letters were included to spell out
exchange names.
It seems that back in the old days of telephony, before there were dials on phones,
you would pick up your telephone and give the operator the number you wanted. That
number usually consisted of four or five digits, preceded by the name of an exchange,
a particular region within the city or calling area. The exchanges were usually
named after some feature of the local region; for instance, if you wanted to call
the Pennsylvania Hotel, near Penn Station in New York City, you would ask the operator
to connect you to "Pennsylvania 5000." (Later exchange names were assigned by the
phone company and apparently often had nothing to do with the local region.)
Eventually, dials were added to telephones and you could dial the number you
wanted directly, without operator intervention. The phone company, in its infinite
wisdom, kept the exchange names around; it felt that seven digits would be too hard
for most folks to remember. But how to dial the exchanges on your new dial phone?
Simple the phone company assigned letters to each number, and marked those letters
right on the dial. To indicate an exchange, you abbreviate the exchange name to
its first two or three letters and dial those; you could reach that hotel by dialing
PENnsylvania-5000, or 736-5000. (I think you had to be in New York, though, or get
an operator to connect you to New York; this was before area codes.)
Initially exchanges were abbreviated by their first three letters in many places,
a system referred to as 3L-4N (three letters, four numbers). Most places switched
to 2L-5N between about 1930 and about 1950. The PENnsylvania exchange became the
PEnnsylvania-6 exchange; new PEnnsylvania exchanges could then be added by using
a third digit other than 6. You could still, however, reach that hotel at PEnnsylvania
6-5000.
In the `50s and `60s the phone company decided that the 2L-5N system was a bust,
and switched to ANC, All Number Calling, whereby an exchange number no longer bore
any relation to a word. There was heavy resistance in some quarters in the San Francisco
Bay Area, for instance, the Anti-Digit-Dialing League was formed to protest. Some
exchange names persisted, but by now they`ve all faded away.
But all is not yet lost! Thanks to Robert Crowe and the other folks at the
Telephone Exchange Names Project,
you can find out what your local exchange was historically, or (if your exchange
number is too new to have a historical name) pick a historical exchange name to
use. Then you too can be cool and retro by giving your phone number starting with
an exchange name. Next time I order pizza and they ask for my phone number, I just
might start out with "YOrkshire 2..."
Project index
|
Free Online Music games |
Speed reading free lessons|
Mnemonic games |
fun online games |
Kids games (painting, action, games for girls) |
Billiards online games |
Chip games and flash design |
Speed typing free online lessons |
|